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28 WOMAN'S PAGE: gk 3. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, MONDAY, D. c., JANUARY 16, 1928. FEATURES. Cummerbund Effg:ct in Fro_cks BY MARY MARSHALL. New words are coined and old ones are reapplied to new developments of fashion and almost never is any record to be found of where or by whom these applications were first made. I spent some time one day out of sheer curi- NEW FROCK OF NAVY BLUE SATIN. GLOSSY SIDE OF MATERIAL IS USED FOR WIDE BAND AND DEEP | o vanilla and a pinch of nutmeg and | CUFFS, WHILE DULL SURFACE 1S USED FOR REST. osity to try and find out the actual source of the word four plus as applied to Englishmen’'s knickers, and after telephoning to every one I could think of who ought to know I gave it up. Finger Nails. OUR CHILDREN By Angelo Patri T was told precisely what a four plus was and just how it differed from the usual knicker—but “why plus” and “why four”? My supposed authorities neither knew nor cared to know. At least we have the satisfaction of knowing that bloomers were named alter the ploneer suffragist, Amelia Bloomer, though as it happens she was not the first woman to wear ’em. I heard the other day for the first time the word “cummerbund” as applied to women's fashions. Some one spoke of one of the new frocks from one of the prominent French dressmakers as having a “cummerbund effect”—just | like that, as if every one knew just what a cummerbund effect was. Well, as I discovered, the word is of Persian origin and was used originally in Persia to indicate a wide sort of loin cloth worn by the natives. As used in present-day fashions it indicates a wide straight application of the material ex- tending usually from above the waist- line to & little below the hips. In the frock spoken of this band was | made of the shiny side of satin while | the rest of the frock save for the deep cuffs was made of the other side. Some- times, as you know, the cummerbund is | made of ‘opaque silk while the skirt portion and bodice above the band are of georgette or chiffon. But who, I wonder, first called it a cummerbund? If you have a little girl or know a | little girl for whom you would like to make a new frock, send me a stamped. | self-addressed envelope and let me send you the sketch, diagram-pattern and working directions for & little frock that in my estimation is one of the most charming models offered for late Winter and Spring. The pattern is | quite simple and may be adjusted to | suit any measureme: It would, in fact, make attractive house frock for yourself. (Coprrieht. 1928} . Cream Coffee Cake. Cream together one and one-half cupfuls of granulated sugar and three- fourths cupful of butter. Add four egg yolks, well beaten, and one cupful of very strong coffee and milk mixed. Sift with two teaspoonfuls of baking pow- der enough flour to make the cake of | the right consistency and add a pinch iof salt. Add to the first mixture & |little at & time. Add two teaspoonfuls at last fold in the well beaten whites of the eggs. This will make three lay- ers. For a filling beat well two cup- | fuls of whipping cream., add one cupful | of powdered sugar, five tablespoonfuls | of strong, cold, black coffee and vanilla | to flavor. | Experience teaches me this: If every | limem finger rises to the mouth there When a child bites his nails, we | is a check upon it that draws the con- may be sure that something is troubling | scjous mind of the child to function, | Bim. It may be Do more than the | the finger is taken away. If the check Tight answer 10 an example or how 10 | js almost constant, if every time the get permission to go to the movies. It | child begins to nibble something hap- may be other kinds of worry. No child | pens to make him know he is doing bites his nails when he is heartlly, | 55, the idea of not nibbling will be reg- wholesomely happy. He bites them un- | istered and the flnfir will be with- consciously. | drawn every time it is lifted, in time— “I remind him again and again, but | jong time. the next minute his finger is in BiS| “We work to establish that habit. We | mouth.” | keep the nails perfectly clean because “Ellen’s fingers are pitiful but 1o any sand will trouble the finger and matter what [ say she goes right on send it to seek comfort. All ragged- biting them. I have punished her, re- Fashionable by dJulia Boyd 7 N 4, O an, Ameriean poet. | To mention his bring to mind e | e | te. He g | Mlusions | Ye who read are still among the liv- | ing; but I who write shall have long since gone my way into the region of | shadows. For, indeed, strange things | shall happen,” and secret things be | (E o Gold ' Bug. * ot | known, and many centuries shall pass | away, ere these memorials be seen of | men. And, when seen, there will be! some to disbelieve and some to doubt, | WORLD FAMOUS STORIE SHADOW R Folk Uncooked Diet. Often the simplest alds prove to be the best, but it is human nature to put more faith in expensive cosmetics and complicated beauty treatments than in the easy, homemade ones. There are few beauty seekers who -ealize that as | rommonplace a thing as a breakfast or | tancheon menu may hold the solution I o7 thelr beauty problem. When ex- ‘tornal applications fail to clear the complexion a change of dlet may cure | { thie_trouble. i { Today I am golng to give some un- | cooked “menus that are good for mi- lady's complexion. In planning meals of raw foods one must, of course, choose what {s palatable and digestible ithout cooking. Some foods are de- liclous raw while others are not fit to (cat until cooked. | One meal a day, either breakfast or the midday lunch, may be com- | bosed entirely of raw products. Those | Who work away from home may find {1t most convenient to choose lunch- {con as the time for trying out the un- cooked menus. .Foods that are edible in the raw state are usually very rich in vitamins. They also help in pre- | venling constipation. For these rea- isons they are real beauty aids because | they promote general health, | | The variety of foods that may be raten raw is wider than most people imagine. Daily products such as| whole . milk. buttermilk, cream, but-| ter and cheese with nuts, prunes, | dates, raisins and figs form the back- | bone of the uncooked dlet. Fresh | fruits must be included as well as vegetables such as lettuce, cucumbers, | tomatoes, new peas, carrots, celery, | turnips and cabbage, Some people lke | raw potatoes, also raw eggs beaten up | with milk. Grains of a certain kind Are tasty in the uncooked state. Here | are some menu suggestions: | | Vincooked Breakfasts. One—An apple; dish of rolled wheat When Emotion Runs High. The headlines for a day reflect the | SWAy of high-powered emotions. At the moment three exciting situations occu- Py the front page. A profound wave of sympathy and concern is felt for the officers and crew imprisoned at the bot- tom of the sca, with thrilling reports of their attempt to communicate with those coming to their rescue. Here is | tense drama. The news that fresh air may reach them is exciting. Through | the courage of the div we have the chance that the men may still be alive, and kept alive until the powerful der- ricks are installed to their rescue from a new form of shipwreck. What a thrill of joy should the hope be realized. | Yet we are prepared to hope in vain. | Here is human sympathy on a vast | scale shared by a naton, and the more | intensely because it applies to men in the service of their country. Here is KEEPING MENTALLY FIT BY PROF. JOSEPH JASTROW. with chopped dates and cream; glass of warm milk. Two—Grapefrult; a beverage made of grape juice, hot water and honey; raw oatmeal with raisins and cream. ‘Three—A banana: eggnog made of raw eggs, whole milk, a little vanilla and brown sugar. Uncooked Luncheons. One—Cream cheese and chopped figs and dates; vegetable salad made of lettuce, grated carrots and celery with a dressing made of equal parts of lemon juice and olive oll seasoned to taste with salt, sugar and mustard; glass of orange juice. ‘Two—Chopped nuts and dates; glass of buttermilk; pear salad with grated cheese, Three—Nut meats; sliced tomatoes or cucumbers; apple and raisin salad; grape juice. Four—Fruit cocktall containing grapefruit, orange and banana: cole- slaw with French dressing: walnuts, (Copvrizht. 1078 ) | | | | the numbers of the banknotes broad- cast by radio to a million homes Science unites and places at the com- mand of society the instruments for spreading waves of sympathetic emo- tion that bind a people together and make them of one mind. The third incident is fortunately in behalf of the emotion of joy. Here is a mother flying overland by stages, to spend the Christmas holidays with her son who is a favorite son of a great nation. Flying to Mexico on a mission of good will the “Lone Eagle” is cementing the bonds of friendship be- tween peoples conflicting in tradition and interests in the past. but striving toward a fairer understanding in the future, Again & common thrill of triumph unites the peoples from East to West and North to South. In the period of peace on earth and good will to men this romantic expression finds a cor- | ness, all roughness of any kind must warded her, painted her finger ends | be smoothed away and the nails kept | polished. Polished nails are unpleasant | to the teeth and serve as one of the | checks. | _We explain to the older children that there is an intelligence in the finger ends and 1f the nalls are bitten down this Intelligence is blunted, the fingers | lose their beauty and their power. The delicate sense that lies in the finger ends lends a certain high quality to whatever passes through them to the mind. No child can afford to lose a grain of that power, that beauty. Examine the nails three times a | day—before each meal. Suggest at bed- time, as the child falls asleep, “You | will keep your fingers out of your { mouth.” Inspire the child to want to keep them in good shape. Once he wants to, your work is finished. We | have to teach and teach and teach, in | order to establish the idea of not bit- ing. The rare old habit of seeking | comfort through the mouth will always | be there. That is why this task is so | difficult, with bitter aloes, all 10 no purpose; she even bites them in church.” But she never bites them when she ing ball isn't biting his fingers for that hour anyway. The girl who is skating or riding a horse or shoveling snow isn't biting her nails for that lime. No child bites nails when he is happy. His fingers seek his mouth for comfort. “I've asked the children why they do it and they say they don’t know. Ellen truth. They do not know why they bite their nalls and neither do L I know when they bite them—during times when their minds are working hard and the consciousness has re- treated into the seclusion of its deeper recesses. But why, when that happens, the child is uneasy and comforts him- :en!é‘w biting his nails? No. I don't The Daily Cross-Word Puzzle (Copyright. 1928.) Across. Caught with 2 rope or] y (8b). Prounoun. Mountain in Crete Eetor Writing instruments. Presage. Gem Half Venicle. Answer 10 Yesterday's Puzzle, Resinous substance, 4. Gazelle of ‘LIihet Unit of germplasm, 5h. ‘Lurkish general 47, Nicknaime. 4. Bromach Fiver in Bohemia, Long tor, 2, Thritry, Down, ferent rations, Mixed ty Nignt before. . Unit, of force, Geerve Household god. Conjunetion, Fossinly, P Weight, Wisth Lnde finite article Frinter's meusure The sun Nt even, Cushion Metrde unit, Puossensen For example (ah ) Ostrich-like bird, Plov of gress, Nalty. Equality of value, Acoording e, Mother, dlheddag P ARG . . Exchange between citizens of dif- and yet a few who will find much to ponder upon in the characters here graven with a stylus of iron. | The year had been a year of terror, !and of feeling more intense than ter- ror, for which there is no name upon | the earth. For many prodigles and signs had taken place, and far and| | wide, over sea and land, the black | | wings of the Pestilence were spread abroad. To those, nevertheless, cun- ning in the stars, it was not unknown | that the heavens wore an aspect of 11l; and to me, the Greek Oinos, among others, it was evident that now had | arrived the alternation of that 794th year, when, at the entrance of Arles, the planet Jupiter s conjoined with the red wing of the terrible Saturn. The ureculhr spirit of the skies, if 1 mistake not greatly, made itself mani- ! fest, not only in the physical orb of the earth but in the souls, imagina- tions, and meditations of mankind. Over some flasks of red Chian wine, within the walls of a noble hall, in & dim city called Ptolemais, we sat, at night, a company of seven. And to our chamber there was no entrance save by a lofty door of brass; and the | door was fashioned by the artisan Corinnos, and, being of rare workman- ship, was fastened from within. Black draperies, likewise, in the gloomy room, shut out from our view the moon, the lurid stars, and the people- less streets—but the boding and the memory of Evil they would not be 80 _excluded. There were things around us and abort of which I can render no dis- tinet account—things material and spiritual—heaviness in the atmos- phere—a sense of suffocation—anxiety —and, above all, that terrible state of existence which the nervous experi- ence when the senses are keenly livi and awake, and meanwhile the powers of thought lie dormant. A dead weight hung upon us. It hung upon our limbs—upon the house- hold furniture—upon the goblets from which we drank: and all things were depressed, and borne down thereby— all things save only the flames of the seven fron lamps which illumined our revel. Uprearing themselves in tall slender lines of light, they thus re- mained burning all pallid and motion- ess; end In the mirror which their luster formed upon the round table of ebony at which we sat, each of us there assembled beheld the pallor of his own countenance, and the unqulet glare in the downcast eyes of his com- panions. Yet we laughed and were merry in our proper way-—-which was hysterical; and sang the songs of Anacreon—which are madness; and drank deeply—although the purple wine reminded us of blood. For there was yet another tenant of our cham- ber in the person of young Zotlus, Dead, and at full Jeng he lay, | enshrouded-—the genius and the demon of the scene. Alas! 1o bore no portion in our mirth, save that his countenance, distorted with the plague, and his eyes in which Death had bul extinguished the fire of the peatilence, seemed 1o take such iuterest o our merriment an the dend may haply take in the merriment of those who re W die But though 1, Ofnos, felt that the | Villie Wills BY KOBERT QUILLEN, eyes of the departed were upon me, still I forced myself not to perceive the bitterness of their expression, and gazing down steadily into the depths of the ebony mirror, sang with a loud and sonorous voice the songs of the son of Teios. But gradually my songs they ceased, and their echoes, rolling afar off among the sable draperies ol the chamber, became weak and undis- tingu! ble, and so faded away. And lo! from among those sable draperies | where the sounds of the song depart- ed there came forth a dark and unde- fined shadow —a shadow such as the moon, when low in heaven, might! fashion from the figure of a man; but it was the shadow neither of man, nor of God, nor of any familiar thing. Ard quivering awhile among the | draperies of the room, it at length| rested in full view upon the surface of the door of brass. But the shadow was vague, and formless, and indefinite, and was the shadow of neither man nor God - neither God of Greece, nor God of Chaldea, nor any Egyptian God And the shadow rested upon the brazen doorway, and under the arch of the entablature of the door, and moved not, nor spoke any work, but there became stationary and remained. And the door whereupon the shadow rested was, if 1 remember aright, over against Lhe feet of the young Zollus enshrouded. But we, the seven there assembled, having seen the shadow as it came out from among the draperies dared not steadily behold it, but cast down our eyes, and gazed continually into the depths of the mirror of ebony Aund at length I, Oinos, speaking some low words, demanded of the shadow its dwelling and its appellation. And the shadow answered: “I am Shadow, and my dwelling is near to the Catacombs of Ptolemals, | and hard by those dim plains of Elusion which border upon the foul Charontan :un;l that leads to the abode of the ead.” And then did we, the seven, start from our seats in horror and stand trembling, and shuddering, and aghast; for the tones in the voice of the shadow were not the tones of any one being, but of a multitude of beings, and varying in their cadences from syllable to syllable, fell duskily upon our €ars in the well remembered and famil- cents of many thousand departed friends. “Yea, though I walk through the valley of the Shadow,” says the Psalm of David. LITTLE BENNY BY LEE PAPE. We was having histry in skool today and I herd a kind of a rolling noise in back of me and I terned around and it was Puds Bimkins making 3 empty spools have & race down his desk, and 1 lr[x on looking back watching him, #nd Sam Cross leened across the ile to watch too, and Miss Kitty sed, Benny Potts are you paying the slightest ate mlumn u:k\v:fl. m saying? e quick terning around a Mam? Yes mam. Ediming. Charles Binkins and Samuel Cross, are you paying attention? Miss Kitty ned ‘Them both saying they wa Kitty sed, Good, 1d be gl h.)"h?fl'Mr.-l’l‘ 111 wasent sorry to be obliged to doubt It No doubt Benny Potts can tell me wat Ive bin speeking about if he's bin paying suteh close and undivided atten- Uon, she ned Ponsdy Leon, T ged, M, trying to think of wat 'luo-lb:::lr‘n:m and Miss Kitly sed, Alid wal did hie ‘g0 VO WhO was hie He was & forriner and 1. ] he discovered, Very Ixplicit 1 must gateattention but not '35 e, M1 csann:’wdér "’l’:q?::‘l‘:t S iy o e o M"" g n with grate bril: am? Puds sed. And h ing, Ponsdy Leon was a and he set sail Very nice of him, Samuel Cross will now give us the result of his attention, she sed Do you meen about Ponsdy Lean?® Bam Cross ned, and Miss Kitty sed, Precisely, and Bam sed, He dident do enything Uil after Columblss did And you wont do enything (1l you have remuined o half wn hour after the cluss Is dismissed, and neither will Benny and Chinrlos, Miss Kitty sed Wich we dident, not hiving enything speshil 1o do enyways ony that wasent g0t up, Ate 1xp - lorer “The reuson 1've got on my Bunday [unts is because 1 put dosen eugs In he pockets of my ever' day panis so 1 wouldn't have to carry the sack an' fell o8 of my suilts on the way ho el e aldd LU L * - muteh of & consolsi ‘The Bpanish ready expen has al government $12,000,000 on bull Ings for the Bpantsh-American Expo- aition (0 be hold in Beville next yeas, no private enterprise, but one of the accidents of the service of the seas. | From coast to coast the wave of | human emotion extends. From the At- | lantic to the Pacific, we are one as | we share emotion. 'From California | ! comes a story that arouses to the depth | page. They serve to make plain that of indignation all the intensity of hu- | émotion is the great bond which unites man anger and the flerce desire for | and prepares for mutual understanding. prompt and telling revenge. With a | Because man is emotional he likes cruelty that many believe could hardly drama and action. Reason seems a be exercised by any human being in | Weak device to make men of the same his senscs. & child is lured away from | mind. It hasn't the compelling power school and brutally mutilated and mur- | of & tense and critical situation, & dis- dered, and a toll exacted from the dis- | aster. a crime, a bit of heroism. We tracted parents. A man-hunt with all | must think of education not as con- the passion of the jungle proceeds to | fined to the three R's and a fair under- track the perpetrator of this flendish | standing of the simple mental tools of crime, in order to attempt to satisfy | the modern life, but as a careful train- the popular demand for some expres- | ing In the right emotions. hating and sion in a situation almost intolerable | fearing and loving the right qualities dial echo in every heart. It may be bui rarely that through the accident of time three such dis- tinctive thrills of high-powered emo- tion appear side by side on the front in its terror to the safety of every home. | Equally in the service of anxious | sympathy and of outraged feeling are the devices of modern science: for | science is enlisted in humane service as well as in destruction. The radio ! and distance photography and flying machine and the powerful pneumatic derricks all stand ready for humane | service. By the same ingenuity the | features of this inhuman culprit are broadcast by telegraph so that they appear the next morning in papers | throughout the land. He is caught by | Your Baby and Mine | | BY MYRTLE MEVER ELDRED. Mrs. C. M. writes: “C thing for the ears of my 4-month daughter, which double over no ma! ter how hard I try to keep them back 1 am afraid they will grow away from her head. She wants to sit up and I am so afrald of her back. Would you advise this or not?" { Answer—You can buy a cap, espe-| clally designed for this trouble, in the | baby department of any store carrying infant necessities. They are of net, re- | inforced with tape around edge and | over ears. ‘The baby can wear the cap | when going to sleep, so that when he | rolls his head about the ears will not be pressed forward. Do not prop the baby up at this age. He sits on your lap at some time in the day, probably, and this is enough. Mrs. H. T. writes: “Can I give my 21-month-old baby raisins? She them, but I was not sure of them Answer—It would be preferable to| use the raisins after cooking because of the possibllity that the raisins may be old and wormy. In moderate amounts they would not be any harder to digest than prune pulp. Mrs. B. R. D. The three-hour sched- ule for the 17-month-old child is very | good. Your Idea of putting an eleva- tion on the shoe sole would be helpful only for the child who toed in. Flat feet should be treated by exercises, don’t you think? This is a big ques- tion and a blanket statement such as yours would, I am afraid, hardly cover all cases of late walking. Miss R. E—Thank you for your note. The colncidence of our names is un- usual, but T find an innumerable num- ber of Eldreds in the world. They write me from every State. It {s a “married” name, Crumpets and Muffins, | To make crumpets sift half pound of flour with & pinch of salt into & dish. | Heat half an ounce of compressed yest cake and a teaspoonful of sugar to n cream. Melt one ounce of butter in w pan, add half & pint of milk and make t Jukewarm. Add this to the yeast wradually. Pour into a hole tn the cen- ter of the flour and mix well together An ogg may be added with the milk it desired. ~ Cover the dish with w cloth | and leave in & warm place to rise for one and one-! hours, Warm a g dle, gremse it and drop spoonfuls of the mixture onto it. Brown first one #ide then the other. Serve hot, Take flv_;hvln.lnullu to cook, mixture may also be u; mi mufns, by they nMu‘I’d‘ ;.o cooked inside sod muMin rings laced on the greased griddle. Half Al he ri With the mixture, brown on one slde, then remove the rings, turn the muMns and brown the other side. Which will take about 10 minutes, . 2 Cheese Poppers, Put ane small oan of green ohilt pep- pPors i water and wash out (he seedn then cut In strips. Cut one-half o pound of cheeso I oubes about one by one-hall el i slie. Wrap (he stripa of m]brlr around the pleces of cheese | aip & batter made with two the yolks and whites beat- nixed and thick- tablespoonfuls of flour, ute In s frylng Bm untit brown. Suve hot 'fi. o . in the human personality. Only as men share spontaneously and intensely in their sympathies will they form a common resolve to make war against crime, to stand by their fellow- men in distress, to give honor where honor is due. School. court. church, social institutions generally take a hand in this important training of your mind and mine, keeping us mentally and morally fit to share a wholesome life of the emotions. The dramatic incidents serve to emphasize what proper train- ing has established. SONNYSAYINGS BY FANNY Y. CHRY. Come quick. muvver, an' see! tunnin’ ‘ittle mouse I catched is goin’ ter be perfectly satisfy wif your muff | fer a home! (Copyright 1078} The STYLE POST is the marker O the road to being smart-— Junior Furs. One of the biggest of lttle-girl thrills 18 the timo when she acquires a set o fura ‘The fashion, however, ts not & s Phisticated one, especially 1t the neek |mm I8 % “Uppet” whioh folds closely around her thioat and has lttle dan !‘Iml tatlls on one end, ‘The muft, too, A8 A Junlor loak with its rufMes at the) edges. Juvenile furs are mastly eaney White lamb, muskrat, beige caraoul er Awerloan oposswm. Tas | i | | i AR, Slae. . (Cowvrisdh 10800 eEmBmm 4030 :vnml‘ with strong drugs. Just {is sold by e rink Tea - At Breakfast ~ tmakes a del'igbifil] n(l:o:rrxl' ge ig mk ing drin and wil_lgrefi"esh ;:)nd stxmug?fie u as no drink can. l/s:r L \ I New Comfort For Those Who Wear ROAST BEEF is delightfully -ppelixlnl served with a gravy seasoned with LEA & PERRINS’ SAUCE Pouring Tea for Profit High salaried positions open in tea rooms, motor inns, coffee shops. How to start your own tea room. Managers, assistant managers, hostesses, table directors, buyers and other executives are needed in tremendous new field for women. Earnings of $5.000 upward a year; fascinating work: quick success awaits you. No previous experience necessarr. e traln you evenings in spare time. sho: ou how to start own tea room, or put v able positions. Hundreds of Lewis graduates winning handsome earnings in the wonderful new profession. Our Free Employment Burs United States and places gradu: with good position classrooms of on clusively erected to g cinating profession. School building open from 8:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. daily. Midwinter Classes Now Forming LEWIS TEA ROOM INSTITUTE LEWIS HOTEL TRAINING SCHOOLS 23rd and Pa. Ave. N.W. DE SILK STOCKINGS (2 ings! Sevle R-11, Service Wey silkto hem,$1.95 Respond to Subtleties in Feminine Hosiery fi"( The modern woman considers the feclings of )l the opposite sex. For her, Dexdale experts of s the mode have developed stocking creations ... fascinating in color ... in very, very delicate distinctions. At the Dexdale Hosiery Salon, 1348 F St, NW, Washington, D.C. a beautiful display of stocking luxuries awaits your pleasure. f;é'\‘co @) NS = 7 At Sloan’s Art Galleries Med 715 Thirteenth Street Valuable Mahogany Furniture, in all the interest- ing old styles, including many Antiques, Oriental Rugs, both large and small; Paintings and Water Colors, Chinese Works of Art, including Paintings, Screens, Tables, Tabourettes, Bronzes, etc., Dec- orative Mirrors, Sheffield Plate, Imported China, Bric-a-Brac, etc. AT PUBLIC AUCTION (By Catalogue) WITHIN OUR GALLERIES 715 13th St. Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday, January 17th, 18th and 19th, 1928 At 2 P. M. Each Day From Estates, Storage Concerns, Prominent Local Families and Other Sources. Catalogues on Application to the Auctioneers. TERMS €ASH. take A pain white, pleasant-tasting Bad Cold Left Her "\ . ... .o simple 1wt doesnl seen . . During Sermon! s To awake with & cold and be rid of completely in & few hows. But w 1t by noone-wourld vou fike to know | does! Aud there et & single atter how 1o do it? - You don't have to | eltect on heart, head, or stomach It ry druggist for qaly Nw it can Kook a coNl o